Camel Sacrifice is banned in India

COIMBATORE: TNN | Oct 4, 2014 - City Muslims are in for some disappointment as authorities may not
permit the slaughter of camels on the holy occasion of Bakrid.
The Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) wrote to all state
governments on Thursday, informing them that a recent notification
issued by the food safety and standards authority does not allow
slaughter of camels, for any purpose. They have asked the governments to
ensure that camels are not slaughtered on the night before the holy
day. For the past seven to eight years at least seven to eight
camels have been brought into the city from Rajasthan and slaughtered on
the occasion of Bakrid. "They are usually brought in from Kankrauli,
Udaipur or Raj Nagar districts in Rajasthan," said environmentalist N I
Jalaluddin, who heads the nature conservation society. "Their kurbaan,
or sacrifice, is done along with other cows at a wedding hall or ground
specifically rented for this purpose. It happens in Kottaimedu,
Karumbukadai and Podanur," he added. Sources say that since prayers have
to be offered, animals are not taken to the slaughter houses on this
day.

The letter states that "camels cannot be slaughtered 'for food based on
the directions issued by Food Safety and Standards Authority of India
under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare'. A notification issued
by the FSSAI to all food safety commissioners states "under regulation
2.5 definitions of animals, carcass and meat are given. Under sub
regulation 2.5 an animal means ovines (sheep), bovines (ox and cow),
caprines (goats or goat-antelopes) and suillines besides poultry and
fish". AWBI has also asked the governments to ensure that
animals are slaughtered only in slaughter houses and that the transport
of animals act is not violated at any point of time. The Tamil Nadu DGP,
K Ramanujam, said that he had not received the letter yet. "It might
have gone to the commissioner instead, but we have not received any such
communication from them so far," he added. While authorities
are expected to hesitate to follow the directive since it may hurt
religious sentiments, a few religious heads in the city said there are
simpler ways out. "Islam does not prescribe the slaughter of camels
specifically. You can slaughter goats or cows instead," said the Imam of
the Al Ameen Colony mosque, Abu Bakr. "If they slaughter camels in Saudi Arabia it is because the animal is freely available there," he added. "People here do it just to make a spectacle of the event and the festival," he said. Buying a camel costs upto Rs 1,50,000.